| Literature DB >> 27890491 |
Yusuke Fujiwara1, Riki Matsumoto2, Takuro Nakae3, Kiyohide Usami4, Masao Matsuhashi5, Takayuki Kikuchi3, Kazumichi Yoshida3, Takeharu Kunieda6, Susumu Miyamoto3, Tatsuya Mima7, Akio Ikeda8, Rieko Osu9.
Abstract
The cortical motor areas are activated not only during contralateral limb movements but also during ipsilateral limb movements. Although these ipsilateral activities have been observed in several brain imaging studies, their functional role is poorly understood. Due to its high temporal resolution and low susceptibility to artifacts from body movements, the electrocorticogram (ECoG) is an advantageous measurement method for assessing the human brain function of motor behaviors. Here, we demonstrate that contra- and ipsilateral movements share a similarity in the high-frequency band of human ECoG signals. The ECoG signals were measured from the unilateral sensorimotor cortex while patients conducted self-paced movements of different body parts, contra- or ipsilateral to the measurement side. The movement categories (wrist, shoulder, or ankle) of ipsilateral movements were decoded as accurately as those of contralateral movements from spatial patterns of the high-frequency band of the precentral motor area (the primary motor and premotor areas). The decoder, trained in the high-frequency band of ipsilateral movements generalized to contralateral movements, and vice versa, confirmed that the activity patterns related to ipsilateral limb movements were similar to contralateral ones in the precentral motor area. Our results suggest that the high-frequency band activity patterns of ipsilateral and contralateral movements might be functionally coupled to control limbs, even during unilateral movements.Entities:
Keywords: Decoding; ECoG; High gamma; Ipsilateral movement; Precentral motor cortex
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27890491 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2016.11.058
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuroimage ISSN: 1053-8119 Impact factor: 6.556